Vigil held near site of Fredericton shooting

Residents light candles at a vigil on Aug. 10, 2018 at Saint John the Evangelist Church. A shooting that morning claimed the lives of four individuals, including two police officers. - Stu Neatby

FREDERICTON, N.B. - On Friday night, more than 200 people gathered at a vigil near the site of the morning’s shooting.

Religious leaders quickly pulled together the event, held at Saint John the Evangelist Anglican Church, as a way to allow the community to grieve.

On Friday morning, a shooting on Brookside Drive, less than a 10-minute walk from the church, claimed the lives of four individuals, including two police officers.

Geoffrey Hall, a pastor at the Christ-Church Cathedral in downtown Fredericton, said the news was difficult for many in the community process.

think probably all of us who are clergy are very conscious of what Sunday morning is going to look like because our worship is going to have to somehow reflect what has happened in the last few days," Hall said.

Hall said many in the community are asking what could have motivated the shootings.

"I think it will help a lot once we know more details about what really happened."

On Saturday morning, police released the name of an individual, Matthew Vincent Raymond, arrested in connection with the shootings.

Raymond has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder in connection with the deaths of two police officers, 45-year-old Lawrence Robert Costello and 43-year-old Sara Mae Burns, and two Fredericton residents, 42-year-old Donald Adam Robichaud and 32-year-old Bobbie Lee Wright.

A sign outside of Saint John the Evangelist Baptist Church. A shooting on Aug. 10, 2018 claimed the lives of four individuals, including two police officers.

At the end of the vigil, Paul Ranson, the pastor at Saint John the Evangelist, urged members of the community to not let Friday’s events provide the justification for community divisions.

"The problem with good and evil is not us versus them. It's something that runs down the middle of each and every one of us,” Ranson said.

“I want to encourage each and every one of us that, as we leave this place, that we would carry the life with us, that we would carry the hope with us. And that together we could be part of the solution and not contributors to the problem."